More User Reviews:

A- This beer pours a hazy orange body with a creamy turn rocky head of off-white. There are tiny bubbles stuck to the bottom of the glass that soon pop off and disappear into the body. The head last for a few sips before fading to a thin ring around the edge.

S- This aroma of biscuit malt has a lighter plastic aroma that turns more into fresh silage and raw grain as the beer warms. There is a green hop note in the finish that has a slight berry quality to it.

T- The slight sweet biscuit malt flavor is full with some more pale malt flavors underneath. There is a nice soft green hop flavor to the finish with not much bitterness.

M- This beer has a medium mouthfeel with no alcohol heat at all.

D- This beer is malt forward with the biscuit flavor increasing a bit as it warms and it has the berry flavor in the hops growing it warms aswell. This is a easy drinking beer but it is just missing a little something to make it a good session beer.

Ordered a half-liter at the Corner Brewery and paired it with one of their Triple Chip Blondies on a hot summer day in the beer garden.

This beer really hit the spot, though it really didn't resemble a brown ale (it was amber). I think it's more a bitter or English pale ale for the mix of citrus and grassy hops with a bready and fruity malt backbone. The body was fairly light, as you'd expect for the style, making this a great session beer. One of the best beers from Arbor/Corner brewing I've tried.

A- Pours a hazy golden yellow, with a medium sized white head that lingers for a little while. S- I'm starting to notice that all of the Arbor Brewing beers I've had have a similar underlying smell and taste to them. This one is no exception, it definitely reminds me of the other beers from them that I've had. Besides that I smell some light hops, some fruitiness and wheat.T- Again, like I said the taste reminds me of Arbor Brewing. Sweet, sour citrus, some wheat, and a little bit of hoppy bitterness. The aftertaste is a lingering sourness. M- Light bodied and crisp with lots of carbonation. D- Very high, this would be an excellent session beer on a hot summer day. Maybe they would get a little bit too sweet after a few but I don't think that would be a problem.

The website says that this is an English style summer wheat ale, which describes it a lot better than an English Brown Ale. I will be definitely be buying this again in the summer to relax with on a hot day.

No freshness date is given. Poured from a 12 ounce bottle into a pint glass.

Appearance: Hazy golden body with a thin white head that's kept alive by the good carbonation.

Smell: Citrus and wheat. Smells like a mellow witbier.

Taste: I have no idea why this is listed as an English brown ale. After having a sip I'd say it's either a witbier or an American pale wheat ale. Enough about the style let's get on to the taste. Tastes is dominated by sourness. Not much flavor besides sourness and wheat. Little bitterness in the aftertaste.

Pours a slightly hazed yellow-orange with a small, tight white head. Mode brings some mildly sweet caramel malt along with some earthy hops. Taste is along the same lines. Pretty light overall. Feel is light with good carbonation and a nice understated bitterness. Drinks okay, but nothig too special.

Poured a medium golden color with a smaller sized white head. Aromas of wheat and citrus (lemony). Tastes of wheat, citrus, some and some graininess. Some light spiciness in there too. Hmm, listed as a Brown Ale...should be a wheat?

I must agree with the previous review...this is not a brown ale by any means. The Bros recommend Sammy Smith and TurboDog in this category. Those two are nothing like this beer whatsoever. Now on to my review.

A-Golden haze. Pours like a weizen...heavy head. Appears to be bottle conditioned somewhat. Tried to get some of the residue off the bottom to no avail.

S-Sweet, citrusy/fruity. Not what you would find in a Brown Ale.

T-Crisp, nice spice. Pine and citrus.

M-Has the feel of a weizen/wheat. Like a zap to the taste buds.

D-Definitely one I could drink all day. Will probably get more to see if the other "off" reviews have any validity.

Nice look on this one. Smells nice and soft too. Like peaches. Flavor is smooth with a "mild" hoppy bite that's kind of spicy. I like this beer. I'd like to try this on cask (probably won't ever happen). Though I have to wonder if it would be too sweet if naturally carbonated.

I found this at the back of my beer shelf recently and believe it came in a sampler pack picked up towards the end of summer. Solid two finger white head settled with sheet lace that slid easily down the glass. The colour was nothing like an English Brown Ale but fairly light yellow - golden. Nose of honey noughat and fresh peach was promising. Alas, this may have been left hanging around a bit too long, I can't be sure as there was no date indicated anywhere but the taste had a distinct green apples flavour with acidity that made it a bit on the sharp side. Mouthfeel was thin, not much to it. Beyond these tasting notes, I wasn't willing to finish this off, unfortunately it may have been a bit over the hill. Oh well, maybe next time ...

Taste/Mouthfeel: Beer is light and crisp as it enters. With some moderate carbonation comes the sawdust flavor amid a sea of grassiness. Definitely buttery in nature, but not overly oily, it has a great mouthfeel. Finishes partly dry leaving a gentle bitterness which is not unpleasant.

Overall: Not a bad beer. Definitely worth a shot if you're into the EPAs.

Pours out to a dark amber in the glass with a good-sized head. The aroma is that of malt, biscuit dough and light molasses. The taste features a nice rounded out malt to hop presence with a nice snap of hops on the swallow. This beer reminded me of an amber crossed with an English bitter. I like it.

Pours a clear and very light brown color with virtually no head. Looks like tea. Not much aroma hear either, but has some malty aspects to it. Mouthfeel doesn't have much carbonation at all, but has some bitter aftertaste to it. The Taste is very malty with a nutty character to it. Not to much to brag or say about here. Ok overall, but nothing to get excited about. There are way better brown ales out there.